memory theater Conjures Imagery of Future Conflict Solved Through Synth Pop Duels On “Eyes Within Night”

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Memory Theater, Some Sort of Paradise cover

Immediately “Eyes Within Night” sounds like you’re getting a radio transmission from an AM college station in the late 1980s playing underground music in the pre-alternative rock era. Some of the frequencies sound washed out like it’s being played from a tape lovingly listened to countless times and preserved for posterity using a four track tape deck to convert it to digital. The keyboards and the Casiotone play off each other toward the end of the song like dueling synthesizers the dramatic way they might in some weird science fiction movie about rival gangs competing against each other in synth pop bands but with the vibe of Night of the Comet after an apocalyptic event that destroys most of the human race and people are rebuilding civilization and re-creating culture while solving conflict in artistic ways rather than through violence. Or like a New Wave Goth version of Breakin’ or Krush Groove. Who wouldn’t want to see that movie happen? Well memory theater, the Filipinx band from Berkeley, California has the perfect music for the soundtrack. Listen to “Eyes Within Night” on Spotify and follow the group on their Bandcamp page.

memorytheater.bandcamp.com

“Sun Release” by Heron is a Musical Manifestation of the Moment When the Sun Sweeps Away the Night Into Day

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Heron, photo courtesy the artists

The title track to post-rock band Heron’s new album Sun Release is like the dawn itself. Guitar intones with an impressionistic figure, minimal and calm. Then around the three minute mark multiple guitars flood forth with a fiery swarm of majestic riffs to make one forget that it was once quiet and introspective like the dark of night between when there is a moonset and the inevitable sunrise. The song captures the false dawn and then the tentative flickers of illumination before the sun rises into the sky in all its cosmic glory illuminate the world into wakefulness. With drums and the full instrumentation engaging Heron captures that moment between a sleepy early morning and full-flung day. Listen to “Sun Release” on Soundcloud and explore follow Heron and explore Sun Release further at the links below.

heronband.com
soundcloud.com/user-376736334
open.spotify.com/artist/1eDflyuVvl6VwwEmm1NQXM
heronband.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/weareheron
facebook.com/weareheron
instagram.com/heron.band

Queen City Sounds’ Picks for UMS 2019

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Tessa Violet performs at the UMS on Sunday, July 28, 5:45 p.m.

The UMS is back for its 2019 edition running from July 26 through July 28 in the Baker Neighborhood in Denver, Colorado. The festival is unarguably the easiest way to take in the largest representative slice of the local underground music scene with the emphasis on indie rock and some choice representation from the city’s worlds of metal, hip-hop, electronic music and punk. Some years you might even run across more than a couple of the city’s rich experimental/avant-garde, darkwave and noise scenes but not so much this year aside from the Glasss Records showcase Sunday afternoon from 12-5 p.m. which is a well-curated sampling of Denver music’s weird side.

What follows is a guide to my picks for ten of the most interesting acts not from Denver performing at the festival. There will be no local band guide because I already write up enough about local bands throughout most of the year and you can see many of them the rest of the year and I encourage you to visit the UMS website and sample any and all of the bands that look interesting and see them because there are hundred. If you’re from out of town and coming to the UMS, refer back to any of the Best Shows lists I’ve done up to now. Other sites have provided their guides so you can consult those if you’re looking for specific recommendations. For tickets please visit the UMS website and thanks for reading.


Who: Black Mountain
When: Friday, July 26, 8:30-10 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: This Canadian, heavy psychedelic rock band combines 70s psychedelic prog, stoner rock and all the excess and transporting soundscaping that implies. The group released its new album Destroyer in 2019, the first with ex-Sleepy Sun member Rachel Fannan and Adam Bulgasem from Soft Kill. Synth player Jeremy Schmidt has a side project called Sinoia Caves which did the darkly beautiful and unsettling soundtrack to the experimental science fiction horror film Beyond the Black Rainbow.

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Chicano Batman circa 2017, photo by Josue Rivas

Who: Chicano Batman
When: Saturday, July 27, 5-6 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: Chicano Batman embodies a true synthesis of 60s Chicano rock, Tropicália and psychedelia. Like those 60s bands, this Los Angeles-based quartet performs in matching outfits to provide that level of rock theater and it’s songs a fantastic blend of rock and roll and melancholic atmospheres.


Who: Drama
When: Saturday, July 27, 6:20-7 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: A blend of R&B and synthwave, Drama’s songs and videos reflect the multicultural side of American culture and breaking stereotypes of what people look like that make lush, melodic electronic pop music and how that’s presented to the world.


Who: Empress Of
When: Sunday. July 28, 7-7:45 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: Lorely Rodriguez took this project name from a tarot card reading and her synth pop/experimental R&B is bilingual with vocals that traverse registers with finesse. Imagine something like a combination of Cocteau Twins (who Rodriguez cites as an influence) and Toni Braxton and you’re in the right territory.

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Gardens & Villa circa 2011, photo by Tom Murphy

Who: Gardens & Villa
When: Friday, July 26, 5:20-6 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: This band from Santa Barbara, California is probably lumped in with the whole synth pop thing but it’s a way stranger and more experimental band in the vocals and in its songwriting having more in common with Big Black Delta, Fad Gadget and TR/ST than the chillwave that was in vogue when the band started in 2008. Its songs tend to be darker and more willing to indulge sharper edged dynamics than groups going for maximum soft tunefulness.


Who: Leikeli47
When: Friday, July 26, 8:30-10 p.m.
Where: Odyssey Stage
Why: Leikeli47 performs with some kind of head covering and otherwise conceals her true identity like a hip-hop super hero. Her unusual style of music is heavy on swagger and accented beats. At times her songs sound like she listened to a lot of Suicide, Death Grips, M.I.A. as well as dub. But it also means she doesn’t really sound much like anyone else and capable of surprising you.


Who: Tessa Violet
When: Sunday, July 28, 5:45-6:30 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: Tessa Violet’s breezy, sonically rich synth pop is so accessible it’s almost easy to forget what a sharp wit is behind the songwriting. After all she has a song called “I Like (the idea of) You.” But it’s not all reverence and her songwriting style itself is fairly broad and endearingly frank in the realm of pop music and her videos colorful and imaginative.

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Tuxedo, photo by Andi Elloway

Who: Tuxedo
When: Sunday, July 28, 8:15-9:45 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: Mayer Hawthorne made a respectable career for himself in the 2000s for his retro soul style and big stage persona. Teaming up with Jake One he’s part of Tuxedo, a funk and electro R&B band that was ahead of the current trend of all of that, which Hawthorne was already presaging when a lot of people dismissed him as something of an eccentric despite his undeniable cool.

Who: Y La Bamba – photo on website
When: Sunday, July 28, 6:20-7 p.m.
Where: Knockout Stage
Why: Luz Elena Mendoza found a unique place as a songwriter in Portland, Oregon who is making a kind of folk-rooted pop. Her music and outlook comes out of the Mexican folk tradition inspired in part from a young age by mariachis. Her songs use her heritage to explore personal as well as collective struggles with an elegance and creativity that reconciles the dark side of life with hope and joy informed by grace and patience for the process.


Who: Yves Tumor
When: Saturday, July 27, 7:20-8 p.m.
Where: Showcase Stage
Why: Yves Tumor cites Throbbing Gristle as an influence for its hypnotic qualities. And Yves Tumor’s music is not short on ambient noise, confrontational sounds and political consciousness within the context of fairly accessible electronic pop music. For my ears and tastes, the most interesting and boundaries pushing act not from Denver playing the festival and a must see if you’re there on Saturday.

Best Shows in Denver 07/26/19 – 07/31/19

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Thunderpussy performs at the Ogden Theatre on July 27. Photo by Jake Clifford

Friday | July 26

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Built To Spill at Treefort Music Fest 2018, photo by Tom Murphy

What: Built to Spill – Keep It Like a Secret tour w/Orua and Dirt Russell
When: Friday, 07.26, 6 p.m.
Where: Mishawaka Amphitheater, Bellevue, CO
Why: Built To Spill bridged the gap between free improvisational rock, psychedelia and post-punk at a time in the 90s when so much of that was, barring Neil Young, was considered quaint unless you were a fan of wack, mid-90s alternative rock. Built to Spill was very different from some of that more mundane music because when it had album titles like Ultimate Alternative Wavers and songs called “Randy Described Eternity” and “I Would Hurt a Fly” the language of an underground, alternative culture with irreverent humor and an unabashed embrace of the weird and unconventional and out of step with mainstream normality was mincing no words but also not trying to alienate any potential comers. This year the group is touring for the twentieth anniversary of its monumental fourth album Keep It Like a Secret.

What: The Psychedelic Furs w/James and Dear Boy
When: Friday, 07.26, 7 p.m.
Where: Ogden Theatre
Why: The Psychedelic Furs are apparently on the verge of giving us their first new album in nearly thirty years sometime in the next year or two. While the group did take a hiatus in the 90s its iconic 80s albums aged well because while the band had hits it never really made concessions to trends and Richard Butler’s scrappy yet soulful voice and thought-provoking lyrics and the band’s brooding melodies and expansively energetic live show reconciled the thoughts and emotions everyone has into memorable songs. Since the Furs reconvened in 2000 it may have been skating on its back catalog but its shows felt like they were channeling from a time when they first wrote the music and they didn’t waste our time by trotting out material unworthy of its earlier music. The career of Mancunian rock band James was almost in direct parallel with The Psychedelic Furs with its own history of high emotive and idiosyncratic rock songwriting that evolved considerably across time and recent performances displaying the verve and power of its early days as well.

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Anne Waldman circa 2012, photo by Tom Murphy

What: Anne Waldman (w/Adam Baumeister and Roger Green), Wymond Miles, Jeff Suthers and Max & Toni
When: Friday, 07.26, 8-10:30 p.m.
Where: Pon Pon
Why: Anne Waldman is one of the surviving leading lights of the Beat Generation who is also currently involved with running the Naropa Institute (also Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics) of which she was a founder in 1974. Her poetry has a force and consciousness resonant with the rhythms of music and on this evening she will be joined by Meep Records head Adam Baumeister and experimental guitar composer Roger Green formerly of Idle Mind and The Czars. Also on the bill are Wymond Miles of The Fresh & Onlys in San Francisco and prior to that various Denver bands including Pinkku, and Jeff Suthers, the iconic guitarist of Pale Sun, Bright Channel, Volplane, Moonspeed, Pteranodon and other projects.

What: MDC/Verbal Abuse and Round Eye
When: Friday, 07.26, 9 p.m.
Where: Streets Denver
Why: When you call your band Millions of Dead Cops in 1979 you’re already courting trouble. But MDC has also been taking it on the nose and writing hardcore classics with a righteously political edge from the beginning having penned songs about animal rights, LBGTQ issues, racial issues and invective against capitalism with humor and conviction. Lead singer Dave Dictor is proudly a weirdo who is confrontational with his anti-establishment stance in a creative and engaging and often humorous fashion.

What: Amon Tobin presents Two Fingers DJ Set w/Tsuruda, Keota, Seied and GTillDawn
When: Friday, 07.26, 8 p.m.
Where: Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom
Why: Amon Tobin is a versatile composer whose electronic music runs the gamut of dance, jazz and the avant-garde. Tonight he is performing a DJ set so it’s hard to say exactly what he’ll throw into the mix but given his proclivity for imaginative production it won’t be entirely predictable yet a display of great taste.

Saturday | July 27

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Ankleplants circa 2016, photo by Tom Murphy

What: Black Pistol Fire w/Thunderpussy
When: Saturday, 07.27, 8 p.m.
Where: Ogden Theatre
Why: Black Pistol Fire is a likable enough bluesy garage rock band. But the reason to go is to see opening act Thunderpussy who may in some ways share Black Pistol Fire’s affection for driving, blues-based punk riffs but its deft songwriting is a bit like if The Dead Weather took more than a few cues from T. Rex and the mirrored sides of Zeppelin’s hard rocking and contemplative, introspective songwriting. The Seattle-based group’s 2018 self-titled debut is more than a cut above the relatively recent spate of bands that are tapping into inspiration from hard rock’s 70s heyday by not merely trying to rock but not being willing to push the songwriting beyond the clichés. Thunderpussy is willing to get weird and take you into outer space with its music the way Heart, Cheap Trick and David Bowie were more than able to as well.

What: Anklepants and Electrocado
When: Saturday, 07.27, 9 p.m.
Where: The Black Box
Why: Anklepants is what happens when a guy working in the special effects industry makes an outfit in which a phallus attached as the nose of an alien is a controller for the music which is very sophisticated and experimental dance music in the vein of more adventurous house or techno with elements borrowed from the full spectrum of modern dance styles. If you want to see something you’ll never forget this is the show to go and see because while the visual side of the project is entertaining and unusual enough the music stands on its own with no need for gimmicks—the costume is just a bonus over seeing some guy holding headphones on and waving one hand above his head to hype the crowd.

What: The Appleseed Cast w/Young Jesus and Weathered Statues
When: Saturday, 07.27, 7 p.m.
Where: Marquis Theater
Why: The Appleseed Cast might be the most well-known band out of the under celebrated Lawrence, Kansas music scene. Its own contribution to the development of 90s emo and beyond has been its exquisite, borderline dream pop that bridged the gap between midwestern emo and post-rock. Its luminous melodies and richly expressive and nuanced vocals have given the band a cross genre appeal. In 2019 The Appleseed Cast released its most recent album The Fleeting Light of Impermanence.

Monday | July 29

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Frank Iero, photo by Mitchel Wojcik

What: Frank Iero and the Future Violents w/Geoff Rickly
When: Monday, 07.29, 7 p.m.
Where: Marquis Theater
Why: Frank Iero is probably known to most as the guitarist in My Chemical Romance. But seven years hence from that group’s dissolution Iero and his band the Future Violents released their album Barriers produced by Steve Albini. Iero sounds like he dug deep to reinvent himself a little for this new music as it feels raw and heartfelt and even confessional in a way that wasn’t as obvious as his work with MCR. When the songs aren’t brimming with effusive energy there is an introspective mood with music that demonstrate Iero’s keen ear for crafting rock songs with emotional and sonic nuance.

Tuesday | July 30

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Bad Cop / Bad Cop, photo courtesy Fat Wreck Chords

What: Bad Cop / Bad Cop w/Dog Party and Pity Party
When: Tuesday, 07.30, 7:30 p.m.
Where: Lost Lake
Why: Los Angeles-based punk band Band Cop/Bad Cop have a clever name but one that also reflects its politically and socially subversive lyrics. Its massive hooks and pop punk sound is a perfect vehicle for laying out ideas and concepts in a personal and accessible way without coming off preachy. With any luck the band will have a new album soon but its most recent record is 2017’s Warriors put on Fat Wreck Chords.

Wednesday | July 31

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Suzanne Vega, photo from suzannevega.com

What: Suzanne Vega w/Siobhan Wilson
When: Wednesday, 07.31, 7 p.m.
Where: Boulder Theater
Why: Suzanne Vega is perhaps best known by most people for her 80s singles “Luka” (an unabashed song about child abuse that made the Top 40) and “Left of Center” but her eclectic and varied career has included collaborating with Philip Glass for his weirdo jazz record Songs from Liquid Days and her own impressively broad range as a songwriter with a knack for writing thoughtful, literate songs that have long found a place in college radio and “modern rock” playlists and occupies a similar place in popular music as people like Robyn Hitchcock and Jane Siberry.

 

BellaBoo’s Remix of def.sound’s “Saturdaze” Brings the Vocals to the Forefront in a Gentle Sea of Hypnotic Dub Echoes

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def.sound, photo courtesy the artist

BellaBoo’s remix of “SATURDAZE” by def.sound inverts the emphasized sonics in a way by bringing the Clear Mortifee’s and def.sounds’ vocals to the forefront while emphasizing the beat over the sharply focused synth melody of the original. The cymbals and bass are given a dub treatment to echo with an ever so slightly phased effect to expand the hypnotic and otherworldly feel. The subdued tones are brought up to lend the remix a downtempo quality even as the vocals take on the properties of a sample used as part of the dub as well. It displays the producer’s talents for creative re-imagining in his own style as his original songs favor organic percussion sampled and spliced in with electronic beats and dreamy, cool color atmospherics with a gently playful sensibility like he lets daydreams take bits of sound, rhythm and melody and run with them until they make a kind of subconscious sense that translates into an aesthetic that seems pleasantly familiar but mysterious all at once. It’s a way of approaching making music that remixer and songwriting seem to share thus a fine match. Listen below and follow def.sound at the links provided.

soundcloud.com/deffery
instagram.com/def.sound

The Sense of Hopeful Resignation in frogi’s “time” is Heartbreaking

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frogi, photo courtesy the artist

With a palpable vulnerability and affection, frogi’s “time” is overflowing with expansive melodies and an elevated tone. There is a soft touch to the songwriting as she sings to her significant other about how maybe time will heal the ailing relationship in which she sees some hope. And that if what’s left isn’t nurtured it will be the end. She doesn’t want it to be the end but she feels powerless over what seems to others inevitable. The undertone is a sense of hopeful resignation, resisting what she knows is already over while acknowledging for herself that letting go will hurt so much if she doesn’t give it the spark of a chance it deserves. The song employs unconventional structure aimed more at the emotional impact and experiential aspect of the songwriting and frogi’s singing style a fascinating mix of free verse poetry and classic pop. Listen to “time” on Soundcloud and listen to her other recent single “peace of mind” on Spotify.

The Dark Synth Pop of Oliver Marson’s “Cocaine Romance” is a Lurid, Lynchian Snapshot of a Doomed Romance

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Oliver Marson, photo courtesy the artist

The music video for Oliver Marson’s “Cocaine Romance” is like a short Panos Cosmatos film about the paranoia and amplified unreality that the title of the song suggests. The female lead runs through glowing red forests and other characters, like rejects from the Black Lodge, look on with an eerie knowing of her dark end after losing her mind while driving away desperately to escape from her tormentors. It’s Lovecraftian in that way minus overt denizens from a dark, menacing part of the universe. The music is like a synth pop song written by The Damned with dramatic vocals and a neo-Gothic story about a doomed romance based on the shaky foundation of a fondness for substances and not something more substantial. Though upbeat and melodic there is a darkness to the song that resonates with juxtaposition of brightness with personal darkness in the likes of New Order’s “True Faith” and Depeche Mode’s “Never Let Me Down Again” and their own surreal videos. Oliver Marson is tapping into similar sensibilities but his sound is a more contemporary take on the aesthetic of that era with more distorted synths and a hint of self-awareness. Watch the video below and follow Oliver Marson at the links provided.

soundcloud.com/olivermarson
youtube.com/channel/UCGWui3Lpq0lY60qc9rpLPYQ
facebook.com/oliver.marson
instagram.com/oliver.marson

Remi’s New Single “5 A.M.” is a Fearless, Beautiful and Self-Deprecating Examination of a Toxic Relationship

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Remi and Whosane, photo courtesy the artists

Remi’s new single “5 A.M.” features his friend and collaborator Whosane and together the two artists vividly evoke how the mind in extreme circumstances often forces us to the dark places of the truth we might otherwise leave buried. It was inspired by a time when Remi had been sick with the flu and as his body was processing out the virus in its various ways his psyche was bubbling with past emotional trauma that had not been properly processed either yet sparking in Remi the need to articulate that for himself the experience and then to cast it forth as a song with the help of his friend Silent J’s (no relation or connection, really) beat. The result is a vibrant song that is haunted by atmospheric synths, expertly syncopated electronic percussion and self-avowedly self-deprecating and shockingly frank and vivid lyrics that swim and flow with uncomfortable truths amid dreamy melodies. Listen to “5 A.M.” on Soundcloud and follow the Australian hip-hop artist Remi at the links below.

remikolawole.com
soundcloud.com/remzilla
twitter.com/remikolawole
facebook.com/RemiKolawoleMusic
instagram.com/remikolawole

“Keep Talkin” by Bader x Colz is a Genre Bending and Bursting Crossover of Middle Eastern, African and English Dance Music

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Colz of Bader x Colz, photo courtesy Tenwest

“Keep Talkin,” represents a meeting of international minds an creatives between Saudi Arabia’s fairly new electronic music world as represented by producer Bader and Lewisham, London-based vocalist Colz. The latter’s musical style is a mix of reggaeton and afro swing he calls “Afroton” and the collaboration as “Bader x Colz” is the debut release on Bader’s label SoundsBader. The video, filmed in Dubai, stikes one as incredibly subversive for the swagger and sentiments and celebration of lighthearted hedonism and references to ganja in and out of a place where such things are, at least in the public sphere, not just taboo but subject to severe criminal penalties. Nevertheless the jaunty rhythm and infectious melody of “Keep Talkin” is irresistible and its genre crossover from South London “Afroton” and Bader’s finely sculpted, dub-like bass warble accenting Colz’s deft wordplay sound is an exciting, natural and inevitable synthesis of Middle Eastern and African polyrhythms and poetry (which have so much in common sonically and culturally) and modern club music. Check out the video below and follow the artists through their UK based imprint Tenwest.

www.tenwestgroup.com

Magdaluna’s “Deep Space: 1985” Is a Post-Rock, Black Metal, Dark Science Fiction Epic

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Magdaluna, image courtesy the artist

Enigmatically titled “Deep Space: 1985,” Magdaluna’s latest single weaves together post-rock, mournful piano with fiery and corrosive drone guitar and dramatic and expressive percussion. One might think of it as a slice out of a lost science fiction movie of the era like the background information on the space vampires from Lifeforce before they were encased in the sleep coffins having been put in suspended animation to end their reign of terror. One imagines from there a group of people who tricked the vampires eons ago into quelling their endless hunger and then launched them into a lost part of space aimed toward a black hole only to be catapulted back toward inhabited regions by a quirk of gravity in a long arc like a comet from another galaxy. Little known to the would be hero of another world, the vampires would live on again to wreak havoc. But the song suggests this with the melancholic outro. Of course the song isn’t about this but it does stir the imagination and it is imbued with the aesthetic of 1980s space fantasy and dark, dystopian science fiction like Aliens or stories from Heavy Metal Magazine. Listen to the song on Bandcamp and explore Magadaluna’s other work there as well.

Deep Space: 1985 by Magdaluna

magdaluna.bandcamp.com